Earth and Planetary Science Letters 482 (2018) 434–445
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Earth and Planetary Science Letters www.elsevier.com/locate/epsl
The formation of giant clastic extrusions at the end of the Messinian Salinity Crisis Christopher Kirkham a,∗ , Joe Cartwright a , Christian Hermanrud b , Christopher Jebsen c a b c
Department of Earth Sciences, University of Oxford, South Parks Road, Oxford, UK Statoil ASA, N-7005 Trondheim, Norway Statoil, N4032 Stavanger, Norway
a r t i c l e
i n f o
Article history: Received 23 June 2017 Received in revised form 30 October 2017 Accepted 1 November 2017 Available online xxxx Editor: A. Yin Keywords: giant clastic extrusion fluid flow overpressure evaporites Messinian Salinity Crisis Zanclean flood
a b s t r a c t This paper documents the discovery of five multi-km scale lensoid bodies that directly overlie the upper surface of the thick (>1 km) Messinian Evaporite sequence. They were identified through the analysis of 3D seismic data from the western Nile Cone. The convergence of the upper and lower bounding reflections of these lensoid bodies, their external and internal reflection configuration, the positive ‘depositional’ relief at their upper surface, and the stratal relationship with underlying and overlying deposits supports the interpretation that these are giant clastic extrusions. The interpretations combined with the stratal position of these clastic extrusions demonstrate a prior unsuspected link between periods of major environment change and basin hydrodynamics on a plate scale. All five lensoid bodies were extruded onto a single, seismically resolvable marker horizon correlatable with the end of the Messinian Salinity Crisis (Horizon M). It is argued that the source of these clastic extrusions is pre-Messinian in origin, which implies massive sediment remobilisation at depth in the pre-evaporitic succession and intrusion through the thick evaporite layer. We propose that the scale and timing of this dramatic event was primed and triggered by near-lithostatic overpressure in the preevaporitic sediments generated through (1) their rapid burial and loading during the Messinian Salinity Crisis and (2) catastrophic re-flooding during its immediate aftermath. The largest of these clastic extrusions has a volume of over c. 116 km3 , making it amongst the largest extruded sedimentary bodies described on Earth. The findings extend the understanding of the upper scale of other analogous clastic extrusions such as mud volcanoes and sediment-hosted hydrothermal systems. Following the 2006 eruption of the Lusi sediment-hosted hydrothermal system in Indonesia, an understanding of the upper scale limit of clastic extrusions has even greater societal relevance, in order to increase awareness of the risk posed by the potential size and longevity of future giant clastic extrusions. © 2017 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
1. Introduction The remobilisation and eruption of clastics at the seabed or surface during the formation of clastic extrusions including mud volcanoes and sediment-hosted hydrothermal systems is significant for several reasons: (1) they provide a route for methane flux to the atmosphere, (2) their flux can vary as a prior indication or response to earthquakes, (3) they are indicative of major basinal hydrodynamic perturbations, (4) they represent a geological hazard that can have a significant impact on human society if extruded in a populated area (Mazzini and Etiope, 2017; Milkov, 2000). This is demonstrated by the societal impact that the 2006
*
Corresponding author. E-mail address:
[email protected] (C. Kirkham).
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.epsl.2017.11.001 0012-821X/© 2017 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
eruption of the Lusi sediment-hosting hydrothermal system had on the population of the Porong sub district, within the Sidoarjo district in east Java (Rudolph et al., 2011; Davies et al., 2008; Mazzini et al., 2007). Clastic extrusions are widely developed in highly mobile tectonic belts and in some intra-plate settings (see Kopf, 2002). They are particularly prevalent in settings that experience rapid sedimentation, thrust loading, active horizontal tectonic compression or in igneous and hydrothermal systems (Milkov, 2000; Mazzini and Etiope, 2017). An interesting open question exists as to the upper scale limit of clastic extrusions. Documented estimates for the largest mud volcanoes are variable and range from 12 km3 to 22.3 km3 to potentially >100 km3 (Davies and Stewart, 2005; Kopf et al., 2001; Mazzini and Etiope, 2017). A better understanding of the upper scale limit of clastic extrusions is important to fully explain these natural phenomena.
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Fig. 1. (A) Map of the Eastern Mediterranean showing the location of the study region within the western Nile Cone. The location of the 3D seismic survey is highlighted, offshore Egypt. (B) Seafloor map within this seismic study area. Prominent geomorphological features include a large number of circular mud cones (MC) primarily distributed within the central region of the study area, numerous growth faults (GF) to the southwest and a channel/levee system (C/L) to the northeast. The lines of seismic section in Fig. 2 (a–a ) and Fig. 4 (b–b and c–c ) are displayed.
Periods of major environmental or regional tectonic perturbations can have a significant impact on the hydrodynamic regime at depth within a basin. Focused fluid venting events associated with the Messinian Salinity Crisis (MSC) have been increasingly documented in recent years (see Bertoni and Cartwright, 2015 for review), particularly linked to the early stages of the crisis. For example, in the Levant Basin (Eastern Mediterranean) pockmark craters at the base of the Messinian have been linked to methane venting as a response to the drawdown of the water column and unloading of pre-Messinian overpressured gas accumulations at the onset of the MSC (Bertoni et al., 2013). The fall in sea level has also been linked with the destabilisation of gas hydrates in the Western Mediterranean Basin (Lorca Basin, SE Spain). The breakdown of gas hydrates resulted in the release of large amounts of methane and caused sedimentary instability of Tortonian marls (Pierre et al., 2002). In addition, late Messinian fluid expulsion (mainly methane) through mud volcano conduits that transect the Messinian succession have been correlated to the drawdown in sea level at 5.55 Ma in the Central Mediterranean, along the basin margin (Iadanza et al., 2013). There is, however, an absence of evidence for large-scale fluid venting events associated with the terminal stages of the MSC. This is surprising given that it has been postulated that rapid evaporite deposition and late MSC sea level fluctuations may have had a significant impact on basinal hydrodynamics (Bertoni and Cartwright, 2015). In this paper we present evidence for a major, short-lived, volumetrically dramatic phase of sediment remobilisation and extrusion that occurred at the termination of the MSC. The evidence is
based on 3D seismic interpretation of a group of large lensoid sedimentary bodies, the upper surfaces of which downlap onto Horizon M (regionally defined as the marker for the end of the MSC). The seismic survey is located in the western portion of the Nile Cone where earlier studies have identified significant Pliocene and younger mud volcanism (Loncke et al., 2004; Mascle et al., 2014; Kirkham et al., 2017b; Dupré et al., 2010; Giresse et al., 2010; Prinzhofer and Deville, 2013) (Fig. 1). The main aims of this paper are to describe and account for the origin of these unusual lensoid bodies and place them in a wider genetic context with reference to well constrained events occurring in the Mediterranean Basin at this time of extreme environmental change at the end of the MSC. We propose that the most likely explanation for the lensoid bodies is that they are giant clastic extrusions. The findings presented within this paper further develop the understanding of the upper scale of clastic extrusions. This has significant implications for our understanding of: (1) the potential risk and societal impact that future large scale clastic extrusions could pose to populated regions; (2) predicting the potential longevity of modern clastic extrusions such as the Lusi sediment-hosted hydrothermal system; (3) a previously undocumented major basinal hydrodynamic event that is correlatable within the terminal stages of the MSC; (4) prior unsuspected links between periods of major environment change and basin hydrodynamics on a plate scale. 2. Geological context The study area is located at the south-western distal limit of the Nile Cone, which is the deepwater continuation of the Nile
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Delta (Fig. 1). This major progradational depositional system built out over the passive continental margin of north-eastern Africa in the Mid-Late Cenozoic, following the capture of the River Nile in the Oligocene (Macgregor, 2012). The Cenozoic development of this passive margin followed prolonged rifting in the Tethyan realm from the Triassic to the Early Cretaceous (Loncke et al., 2004; Dolson et al., 2005). The major extensional faults that comprise the main structural elements of this margin formed initially during Triassic rifting, but were later partially reactivated during the Miocene rifting of the Suez-Red Sea Rift System (Aal et al., 2000; Loncke et al., 2004). The Neogene geological evolution of this region was dominated by the Messinian Salinity Crisis (MSC). The onset of the MSC, recently dated at 5.97 Ma, commenced due to progressive disconnection of the Mediterranean from the Atlantic, coupled by a drawdown in sea level currently estimated in the range of a few hundred meters to over 1000 m (e.g. Rouchy and Caruso, 2006 and Roveri et al., 2016). A subsequent restriction in water circulation and isolation of the Mediterranean Basin led to the temporary abandonment of progradation of marginal depositional systems (Roveri et al., 2016). The widespread arrest of clastic input into the basin was followed by deposition of a thick unit (up to 3 km within some deeper basins) of evaporites, the majority of which (mainly halite) were deposited over a geologically short period of time, with estimates ranging from as little as 60 kyrs to over 600 kyrs (e.g. Roveri et al., 2016 and Meilijson et al., 2017). Re-establishment of normal marine conditions and a rapid rise of sea level to match the global datum occurred at 5.33 Ma in a dramatic event known as the Zanclean Flood (Garcia-Castellanos et al., 2009). Recent modelling of this re-flooding event shows that 90% of the refill could have occurred in a sudden flood spanning a few months to two years, with peak sea level rise rates of >10 m a day (Garcia-Castellanos et al., 2009). The Nile Cone resumed its progradation in the Early Pliocene, and continued to build a large post-evaporitic slope apron throughout the Pliocene to Recent, forming an extensive sedimentary wedge that covers c. 100,000 km2 and extends northwards towards the Mediterranean ridge and Eratosthenes Seamount (Macgregor, 2012). Salt tectonics associated with tilting and differential loading of the Messinian Evaporites by the Nile Cone has strongly influenced the structure of the post-Messinian succession (Loncke et al., 2004; Cartwright and Jackson, 2008). 3. Data and methodology This study is based on the analysis of high resolution 3D pre-stack time (PSTM) and depth (PSDM) migrated seismic data extending over a survey area of ∼4300 km2 located at water depths ranging from c. 2500–3000 m. The binset dimensions of 12.5 × 6.25 m yield a lateral resolution of c. 25 m throughout the post-evaporitic overburden. The data is zero phased with SEG normal polarity, i.e. an increase in acoustic impedance is represented by a positive amplitude response. Vertical seismic resolution is ∼3 m (Frequency – 125 Hz; Velocity – 1520 m/s) at the seabed, ∼8 m (Frequency – 60 Hz; Velocity – 1800 m/s) within the postevaporitic overburden and ∼30 m (Frequency – 35 Hz; Velocity – 4400 m/s) at the Top evaporite (Fig. 2). The seismic data was interpreted using standard seismicstratigraphic techniques adapted for modern 3D seismic volumes (Brown, 2004). All stratigraphically significant marker horizons were correlated throughout the survey area. Mapping was an iterative process using pre-stack time migrated (PSTM) seismic and pre-stack depth migrated (PSDM) seismic. Volumetric computations based on the mapped horizons were made using the PSDM volume. Depth conversion was based on interval velocities obtained from the PSDM processing, which are subject to
errors of about 10% typically due to iterative picking of migration velocities that give the best geological fit (Bacon et al., 2007; Brown, 2004). The main intervals of interest for this study were the stratigraphic units developed immediately preceding, during and after the MSC. The base and top of the main evaporitic interval is defined by the reflections of Horizons N and M (Fig. 2), in accordance with stratigraphic definitions from neighbouring areas in the SE Mediterranean (e.g. Bertoni and Cartwright, 2005). One other important horizon interpreted from this seismic survey, termed here as Horizon L, is developed only locally in the study area, and exhibits an unusual relationship with Horizon M, locally converging to a single common reflection (Fig. 2). This key marker horizon is described in detail below. 4. Observations from 3D seismic data 4.1. Seismic stratigraphy The seismic stratigraphy of the study area is divided into three seismic units, following Kirkham et al. (2017b), and based on the contrasting seismic expression of the units and long range correlation to wells in neighbouring regions (Bertoni and Cartwright, 2005). These seismic units are termed here the Pre-Evaporitic Unit, the Messinian Evaporites and the Post-Evaporitic Unit (Fig. 2). The Pre-Evaporitic Unit is poorly imaged by the seismic data, due to the attenuation and velocity anomalies relating to the overlying high velocity evaporites. It consists of weak to high amplitude reflections with variable continuity. It is deformed by a number of basement faults that in part control the thickness distribution. The upper section of this unit is characterised by an onlapping wedge that thins towards the southwest (Fig. 2). The unit is bound at its top by the ‘soft’ reflection of Horizon N (Fig. 2 and Fig. 3A). The Messinian Evaporites are primarily composed of a transparent, discontinuous and chaotic seismic facies (Fig. 2), typical of the halite-rich Messinian succession documented further to the east (cf. Bertoni and Cartwright, 2007). This wedge-shaped unit exhibits an increase of thickness to >1 km towards the northeast of the study area. The top of the Messinian Evaporites (Horizon M) is characterised by a high amplitude and ‘hard’ reflection that is regionally correlatable and demarcates the end of evaporite deposition (Loncke et al., 2004; Bertoni and Cartwright, 2007) (Fig. 2). Horizons M and Horizon N exhibit irregular geometry of hundreds of metres of relief (Fig. 2 and Fig. 3). Numerous large, circular to irregular depressions greater than 1000 m deep are evident on the structure map of Horizon M, while Horizon N similarly shows large depressions up to 800 m depth and localised and often linear areas of positive structural relief of up to 700 m (Fig. 2 and Fig. 3). The Post-Evaporitic Unit is Pliocene to Recent in age and predominantly comprises a highly coherent reflective depositional unit, with variable amplitude, and high lateral continuity and frequency (Fig. 2). These seismic facies are considered typical of hemipelagic deposits similar to those documented within other regions of the Eastern Mediterranean (Bertoni and Cartwright, 2005; Dupré et al., 2010). The unit is deformed by a series of E–W striking growth faults that detach within the underlying evaporites (Fig. 1). A large number (>350) small mud volcanoes are embedded within this Post-Evaporitic Unit. These range in age from Early Pliocene to Recent (Kirkham et al., 2017b). 110 mud volcanoes have been mapped at the modern seafloor, and are either still active or have become recently inactive (Fig. 1). 4.2. Lensoid bodies above Horizon M Interpretation and mapping of the ‘soft’ reflection, Horizon L, led to the interpretation of five separate localised bodies within
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Fig. 2. (A) An un-interpreted pre-stack depth migrated seismic cross-section through the study area (see line a–a in Fig. 1B for location). (B) The same seismic cross-section as in Fig. 2A, but with interpretation of the stratigraphy. The seismic cross section displays the main stratigraphic units and the presence of the locally developed ‘soft’ reflection of Horizon L (L) above the top of the Messinian Evaporites (ME). The Post-Evaporitic Unit (PoE) is also host to a large number of mud volcanoes (MV) and contains numerous normal faults that detach within the Messinian Evaporites. Sf – Seafloor; M – Horizon M (top-evaporites); N – Horizon N (base-evaporites); PE – Pre-Evaporitic Unit.
Fig. 3. (A) A base-evaporites map that exhibits numerous prominent depressions and ridges of relief, some of which are located beneath lensoid bodies. (B) A top-evaporites map that exhibits numerous prominent depressions, some of which spatially underly lensoid bodies (LB). Outlines of the margins of all five identified lensoid bodies (LB1, LB2, LB3, LB4 and LB5) are displayed in both A and B.
the survey area. These directly overlie large top-evaporite (Horizon M) depressions (Fig. 3B and Fig. 4). The size and relief of these depressions is related to the size of the lensoid bodies: the largest of these depressions (up to 800 m deep and 20 km long) occur beneath large lensoid bodies. Numerous other small depressions occur beneath small lensoid bodies, recently shown by Kirkham et al. (2017b) to have formed via localised subsidence associated with the genesis of depletion zones within the Pre-Evaporitic Unit during mud volcanism. These five bodies exhibit irregular planforms (Fig. 3). Seismic profiles through their centres reveal their internal geometry to be consistently lensoid, with convex upward geometry (Fig. 4). Their maximum vertical thickness ranges from 660 m
to 1190 m, their widths range from 3.27 km to 28.60 km and their volumes range from 1.25 km3 to 116 km3 (Table 1). They are all thickest close to the centre of the body, becoming progressively thinner towards the marginal convergence of their upper and lower bounding surfaces (e.g. Fig. 4). The lensoid bodies are represented as a chaotic to discontinuous, low frequency, and generally low amplitude seismic facies with some localised high amplitude anomalies developed internally (Fig. 4A and Fig. 4B). They are distinctive from the clastic units in the Post-Evaporitic Unit and Pre-Evaporitic Unit in that there is no internal stratification observable developed within them (Fig. 2, Fig. 4A and Fig. 4B). The seismic facies of the lensoid
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Fig. 4. (A) Pre-Stack depth migrated seismic cross-section through Lensoid Body 4 (LB4) (see Fig. 1B for line of section). B: Pre-stack time migrated seismic cross-section through LB4 (same line of section as in Fig. 4A). C: Zoomed seismic cross-section with the wiggle trace displayed through the lateral margin of LB4, displaying the ‘soft’ reflection of Horizon L (L) converging with the ‘hard’ reflection of Horizon M (M) and onlapping of hemipelagites onto Horizon L (see Fig. 1B for line of section). D: 3D model of LB4 comprising the Horizon L and Horizon M. Horizon L and Horizon M converge at the lateral margins of the lensoid body. SF – Seafloor; N – Horizon N.
bodies and the immediately underlying Messinian Evaporites are similar, but the continuity of the hard reflection of Horizon M allows them to be distinguished and mapped separately. The seismic velocities derived from the PSDM also show a marked difference, with the lensoid bodies being consistently in the 2000–2500 m/s range, whereas the Messinian Evaporites exhibit typically much higher velocities of 4,500 m/s (±200 m/s). Horizon L is readily identifiable as a semi-continuous ‘soft’ reflection. The lateral margins of the lensoid bodies are delineated by the convergence of Horizons L and M (Fig. 4C and Fig. 4D). The convergence of these two marker reflections provides a stratigraphic definition for the base of the lensoid bodies, and further confirms their differentiation from the underlying Messinian Evaporites. A sharp parallel onlap of the overlying hemipelagites of the Post-Evaporitic Unit onto Horizon L is observable, in places, around the lateral margins of these bodies (Fig. 4C). The onlap geometry is characterised by a single seismically resolvable onlap surface, which implies that there was no interdigitation of the overlying hemipelagites with the filling material of the lensoid body (cf. Cartwright et al., 1993). The lensoid bodies are all to a greater or lesser extent deformed by a series of mainly E–W trending syn-sedimentary faults that detach within the Messinian Evaporites. This faulting forms part of a regional gravity-driven deformation that exploited the weakness of the Messinian Evaporites during Late Pliocene to Recent tilting and differential loading of this part of the continental margin (Loncke et al., 2004; Cartwright and Jackson, 2008). The faulting thus post-
dates the emplacement of the lensoid bodies, and accounts for their complex present day geometry, with often substantial offsets and rotation of their original geometry (Supplementary Fig. 1). 4.3. Detailed description of the lensoid bodies The five lensoid bodies exhibit considerable variation in geometry and seismic expression. This variation is described below with reference to a selection of three of these lensoid bodies that best illustrate the full range of detailed features observed on the seismic data. 4.3.1. Lensoid body 1 LB1 is located in the south central part of the study area and is the largest of the lensoid bodies in the study area with a volume of 116 km3 (Table 1 and Fig. 3). It is asymmetrical in cross-section, has an irregular planform (Fig. 5). The geometry of Horizon L is dominated by a prominent central ridge that coincides with the thickest development of the body (Fig. 5B and Fig. 5C). The geometry of the onlap onto Horizon L implies that this upper bounding surface of LB1 was expressed as a paleo-topographic relief of c. 300 m (not corrected for compaction) (Fig. 5D). In the region directly below LB1, Horizon N consists of several depressions and a complex ridge structure (visible in time and depth migrated data) which is spatially aligned with the thickest part of the lensoid body and region of greatest relief at Horizon M (Fig. 3A, Fig. 5A and Fig. 5B). This results in a localised thin-
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Table 1 Lensoid body dimensions recorded from 3D seismic data. Longitude
LB1 LB2 LB3 LB4 LB5
28.24401 28.00300 28.30696 28.47415 28.60079
Latitude
E E E E E
32.01514 32.08393 32.28446 32.06930 32.14085
N N N N N
Max vertical thickness (m)
Area (km2 )
Volume (km3 )
Upper surface relief (m)
900 1170 640 730 1010
315 122 8 46 105
116 52 1.25 11 36
300 450 250 350 280
Fig. 5. (A) Pre-stack time migrated seismic cross-section showing lensoid body 1 (LB1) directly on top of Horizon M (M) and several mud volcanoes (MV) and normal faults within the Post-Evaporitic Unit (see Fig. 5C for line of section). (B) Pre-stack depth migrated seismic cross-section through LB1. A connection between the Pre-Evaporitic Unit and LB1 is visible (same line of section as in Fig. 5A). (C) Isopach map of LB1, displaying the irregular planform geometry and thickness variation (see Fig. 3 for location of LB1). (D) Zoomed seismic cross-section of the flanks of LB1 with the wiggle trace displayed, showing the thinning of the lensoid body towards its lateral margins, the polarity and convergence of Horizon L (L) and Horizon M and onlap onto Horizon L (see Fig. 5C for line of section). Sf – Seafloor; N – Horizon N.
ning of the Messinian Evaporites and convergence, or welding, of the Pre-Evaporitic Unit and lensoid body (Fig. 5A and Fig. 5B). Seismic imaging beneath Horizon N is poor, particularly beneath the region of welding. However, pre-evaporite reflections are off-
set and exhibit an abrupt change of gross dip across this zone of disruption, consistent with deformation of this interval by a major fault (Fig. 5A and Fig. 5B). The spatial correlation between this major structure in the Pre-Evaporitic Unit and the ridge-like zone of
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Fig. 6. (A) Pre-stack time migrated seismic cross-section showing lensoid body 2 (LB2) directly on top of Horizon M (M) and faulting of the Post-Evaporitic Unit (see Fig. 6C for line of section). (B) Pre-stack depth migrated seismic cross-section through LB2. A connection between the Pre-Evaporitic Unit and LB2 is clearly displayed (same line of section as in Fig. 6A). (C) Isopach map of LB2, displaying the irregular and elongated planform geometry and thickness variation. The lensoid body is thickest at a central ridge (see Fig. 3 for location of LB2). (D) Zoomed seismic cross-section of the lateral margin of LB2 with the wiggle trace displayed, showing convergence of Horizon L (L) and Horizon M and onlap onto Horizon L (see Fig. 6C for line of section). Sf – Seafloor; N – Horizon N.
welding strongly suggests a genetic link between the faulting and the emplacement of the lensoid body, but the imaging quality of the seismic data on both PSTM and PSDM volumes is too poor to be more explicit as to the nature of this relationship i.e. whether this was passive and exploitative, or active and causative. 4.3.2. Lensoid body 2 LB2 is located within the north westerly region of the study area (Fig. 3), is the thickest of the five lensoid bodies and the second largest with a volume of 52 km3 (Table 1 and Fig. 6). It is elongated in an E–W orientation and is c. 20 km in length (Fig. 6C).
As with LB1, its geometry is dominated by a prominent central ridge coinciding with the thickest part of the body. It is more symmetrical at Horizon L, with northern and southern flanks whose original dip at the time of deposition of the lensoid body are estimated to be c. 6–7◦ (Fig. 6A and Fig. 6B). These flank dips are based on present day geometry of the parallel onlap fill onto Horizon L, with an assumption that the onlapping units were deposited horizontally (cf. Brown and Fisher, 1977) (Fig. 6D). This estimate is conservative because in the absence of direct well calibration of lithology, the angular relationships have not been corrected for later compaction. The magnitude of the paleo-topographic relief is
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Fig. 7. (A) Pre-stack time migrated seismic cross-section showing lensoid body 3 (LB3) directly on top of Horizon M (M). The lensoid body is deformed by faulting in the Post-Evaporitic Unit (see Fig. 7C for line of section). (B) Pre-stack depth migrated seismic cross-section through LB3 (same line of section as in Fig. 7A). (C) Isopach map of LB3, displaying the elliptical planform geometry and maximum thickness centrally and thinning toward the lateral margins (see Fig. 3 for location of LB3). (D) Zoomed seismic cross-section of the lateral margin of LB3 with the wiggle trace displayed, showing convergence of Horizon L (L) and Horizon M and onlap onto Horizon L (see Fig. 7A for line of section). Sf – Seafloor; N – Horizon N.
estimated to be a minimum of 350 m, from the undecompacted thickness of the parallel onlap fill reflections (Fig. 6D). Similarly to LB1, a prominent ridge is visible at Horizon N, directly underlying an up to 800 m deep depression at Horizon M (Fig. 3A, Fig. 6A and Fig. 6B). Localised thinning of the Messinian Evaporites is pronounced beneath LB2, such that a direct juxtaposition of the Pre-Evaporitic Unit and LB2 occurs directly beneath the thickest part of LB2 (Fig. 6A and Fig. 6B). Horizons M and N are welded at this position (Fig. 6A and Fig. 6B). A large off-
set of Horizon N across this central zone (Fig. 6B), is consistent with a partly concealed, deeper structure within the Pre-Evaporitic Unit underlying the lensoid body but imaging artefacts render the deeper structural interpretation uncertain (cf. Fig. 6A and Fig. 6B). 4.3.3. Lensoid body 3 LB3 is the smallest of the lensoid bodies (Table 1), located within the north to central region of the study area (Fig. 3). Despite its total volume of only 1.25 km3 it nonetheless exhibits an
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undecompacted paleo-topographic relief of up to 250 m (Fig. 7A and Fig. 7B). LB3 contrasts with the other lensoid bodies in that its planform is elliptical rather than irregular (Fig. 3 and Fig. 7C) and in cross sectional it is more symmetric (Fig. 7A and Fig. 7B) resulting in a grossly conical 3D geometry. LB3 has markedly steeper flanks (14◦ , uncorrected, estimated from parallel onlap configuration) than LB1 and LB2. (Fig. 7D). In contrast to LB1 and LB2, the Messinian Evaporites do not thin significantly beneath the lensoid body, nor do Horizon M and Horizon N converge (Fig. 7A and Fig. 7B). 5. Discussion 5.1. Interpretation of the lensoid bodies The preceding descriptive sections can be summarised with the following key observations regarding the context and detailed geometry of the five lensoid bodies: 1. Convergence of Horizon L exclusively onto Horizon M occurs at the lateral margins of the lensoid bodies and this defines a closed perimeter for each of the five bodies, with no seismically resolvable connection between them. 2. Horizon L is defined partly by a single discrete onlap surface with no evidence of interdigitation between the onlapping reflections and the internal fill of the lensoid bodies. 3. The lensoid bodies are convex upwards with maximum thickness of 100s of metres distributed in the central region, and original flank angles in the range 1 to 14◦ . 4. The lensoid bodies were expressed with a paleo-topographic relief at the depositional surface of several hundreds of metres. 5. The lensoid bodies lack any internally coherent reflectivity. 6. The lensoid bodies were all emplaced directly onto Horizon M, i.e. at the end of the MSC. The observation of onlap onto the flanks around much of the perimeter extent of each of the five lensoid bodies implies that these bodies were depositional, and exhibited significant seafloor relief extant at Horizon L. The conservative estimates of the original flank dips of this seafloor relief that commonly exceed 5◦ argues that these lensoid bodies are unlikely to be clastic sedimentary fans or sediment drifts. Submarine fans, alluvial fans and contourite drifts typically exhibit upper surface dips of less than a few degrees and are universally found to be internally stratified (Mitchum, 1985; Blair and McPherson, 1994; Faugères et al., 1999). Furthermore, both types of fan and drift bodies tend to be part of a connected depositional system, with feeder systems from updip in the basin (fans), or up-current in the flow regime (drifts), and there is no evidence for either types of feeder system here. Two other types of more fully isolated depositional buildup could be considered, namely carbonate constructional mounds (Burgess et al., 2013), and hydrothermal mounds with associated hyaloclastites (Zhao et al., 2014). Both types of mound could exhibit the observed ranges of flank dips, relief, thickness and the areal dimensions, and commonly exhibit closed perimeters with similarly irregular planforms. However, carbonate mounds tend to have high velocities at the observed depth range, often exceeding 3500 m/s (Vahrenkamp et al., 2004). This means that their upper bounding surfaces should be a high amplitude, ‘hard’ reflection when overlain by acoustically ‘soft’ hemipelagites, as opposed to the moderate amplitude, ‘soft’ reflection consistently observed at Horizon L. Furthermore, carbonate mounds commonly exhibit internal stratification with a much higher amplitude seismic facies (Burgess et al., 2013). Igneous mounds or edifices also commonly exhibit internal stratification, a generally much higher interval velocity (4000 m/s) and a more irregular upper surface than that ob-
served here (Davies et al., 2002; Magee et al., 2013). Furthermore, we note that no volcanic rocks or carbonate mounds have been reported at this stratigraphic position anywhere in the equivalent deeper basinal parts of the Mediterranean Basin. These arguments make it unlikely that the lensoid bodies are constructional carbonate or volcanic mounds. An alternative interpretation that would fully explain the seismic stratigraphic observations presented earlier is that the lensoid bodies are related to mud volcanism, and represent large extrusive edifices. Kirkham et al. (2017b) recently reported evidence of extensive mud volcanism in the study area, albeit post-dating the lensoid bodies, and with much smaller dimensions. They mapped 386 individual mud cones from the early Pliocene to the present day, with a mean volume per cone of c. 1 km3 . This is a typical volume for mud volcanoes on a global scale (Mazzini and Etiope, 2017; Graue, 2000; Calves et al., 2010). These are one to two magnitudes smaller in volume than LB1, 2, 4 and 5, but quite similar in size, geometry, seismic expression and planform to LB3 (Kirkham et al., 2017b) (Table 1 and Fig. 7; Supplementary Fig. 2). Regional occurrence of extrusive edifices more generally in neighbouring areas of the Mediterranean lends further support for this interpretation and provides possible analogues for the geometry and scale of these lensoid bodies as mud extrusions (Mascle et al., 2014). Large and irregular mud extrusions have been reported with similar dimensions to the lensoid bodies described here by Kopf et al. (2001) from the Mediterranean Ridge accretionary complex. These large ‘mud pies’ as termed by Kopf et al. (2001) share the convex upwards geometry and lack of internal stratification with the lensoid bodies described here. This analogy is further supported by the many studies that demonstrate widespread mud remobilisation from the Early Pliocene to Recent within this region (Loncke et al., 2004; Huguen et al., 2009; Dupré et al., 2010, 2014; Giresse et al., 2010; Mascle et al., 2014; Pierre et al., 2014). The lensoid bodies described here, particularly LB1 and LB2, mostly contrast with the geometrically more conical mud volcanoes mapped in the Pliocene and younger succession in the study area, both in geometry and in volume. Their irregular geometry is however more akin to that of the mud pies described by Kopf et al. (2001), which they attributed to the influences of underlying structure and feeder systems. A similar explanation could apply here, accentuated by the significant deformation and faulting of the Post-Evaporitic Unit (including the lensoid bodies) associated with thin skinned gravity tectonics within the region (Supplementary Fig. 1). Although the geometry of the lensoid bodies is irregular, as mud volcanoes have become more widely studied awareness has grown as to the wide variety of extrusional morphologies they can adopt (Mazzini and Etiope, 2017). In summary, we propose that the most plausible interpretation of the lensoid bodies is that they are large extrusive edifices. However, in the absence of direct calibration of these enigmatic bodies much uncertainty remains as to the composition of the extruded clastics and as to the exact type of geological phenomena they represent. Until the lensoid can be better calibrated we suggest referring to them as giant clastic extrusions. 5.2. Genesis of the giant clastic extrusions The interpretation of the lensoid bodies as clastic extrusions raises important questions regarding the hydrodynamic regime in the basin at the time of their extrusion at the termination of the MSC. Collectively and individually, these clastic extrusions represent a major flux of remobilised sediment from depth in this part of the basin, which implies the presence of a volumetrically extensive underlying source region (Kopf, 2002). The combined volume of all five lensoid bodies is greater than the total extruded vol-
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Fig. 8. A schematic model for the genesis of giant clastic extrusions within the western Nile Cone. Their formation has been divided into 4 stages (A–D). The description of these stages can be found in the ‘Overpressure and remobilisation mechanisms’ section of the discussion. SL – Sea level; Sf – Seafloor; OP – Overpressure; CE – Clastic extrusion; TE – Top-evaporites; BE – Base-evaporites; PoE – Post-Evaporitic Unit; ME – Messinian Evaporites; PE – Pre-Evaporitic Unit.
ume recorded in 386 mud volcanoes mapped at a shallower level (Pliocene to Recent) in the same study area (Kirkham et al., 2017b). The individual volumes of the largest three lensoid bodies range from 36 km3 to 116 km3 . By comparison, the largest individual mud volcano defined from an interpretation of 3D seismic data was in the South Caspian Sea and measured 22.5 km3 (Davies and Stewart, 2005). This is considerably smaller than the volume of the largest three lensoid bodies as described here. 5.2.1. Source The fact that the giant clastic extrusions were emplaced directly onto Horizon M (Fig. 4, Fig. 5, Fig. 6 and Fig. 7) implies that the source of the remobilised mud must have come from beneath the evaporitic unit. A pre-Messinian Evaporite source was also invoked by Kirkham et al. (2017b) to explain the source for the large number of smaller mud volcanoes in the Post-Evaporitic Unit of this area. Evidence cited includes piston cores taken from recent mud volcanism that contain pre-Messinian clasts, gas seepage samples in part comprised of very mature thermogenic gas and hot saline pools associated with evaporite dissolution as documented evidence (Huguen et al., 2009; Giresse et al., 2010; Prinzhofer and Deville, 2013; Dupré et al., 2014; Mascle et al., 2014; Pierre et al., 2014). The remobilisation and withdrawal of large volumes of sediment from this interval and the subsequent formation of pronounced pre-Messinian depletion zones would also account for much of the irregular geometry seen at Horizon N (Fig. 3A) (cf. Stewart and Davies, 2006; Kirkham et al., 2017a, 2017b). 5.2.2. Overpressure and remobilisation mechanisms Remobilisation and extrusion of such huge volumes of clastic sediments implies that the source region was highly overpressured at the time of the extrusion event (Mazzini and Etiope, 2017), or was susceptible to remobilisation through some other process leading to liquefaction (Rudolph et al., 2011). We propose a model for the formation of the giant clastic extrusions described here, that attributes the extraordinary flux of extruded sediment at the end of the MSC to the hydrodynamic impact of the rapid periods of environmental change associated with the MSC (Fig. 8). By the end of the MSC at 5.33 Ma, large thicknesses (up to 2 km) of evaporites had accumulated over large regions of thick underlying clastic, dominantly fine-grained sediments, including those in the study area. The evaporite deposition involved ex-
ceptional sedimentation rates potentially up to c. 4 cm/yr (Roveri et al., 2016; Rouchy and Caruso, 2006) (Fig. 8A). Such rapid deposition of a laterally extensive and extremely low permeability evaporite layer would have prevented or retarded compactional dewatering of the underlying sediments (Osborne and Swarbrick, 1997) and led to the build-up of significant overpressure beneath the evaporites in the putative source interval at depth beneath the Messinian Evaporites in the study area (Fig. 8A). Overpressure in the Pre-Evaporite Unit is likely to have persisted until a critical fluid pressure for hydraulic fracturing of the overlying evaporite seal was achieved. The stratigraphic position of all the mud volcanoes described here (LBs 1–5) directly on top of Horizon M, with no evidence of interdigitation with the evaporites, implies that this was achieved at the very final stages of the MSC. It is at this time (5.33 Ma) that Atlantic waters catastrophically and almost instantaneously (in terms of geological time) flooded through the Gibraltar Strait refilling the Mediterranean during the Zanclean flood (Garcia-Castellanos et al., 2009) (Fig. 8B). The almost instantaneous loading of an estimated 1–2 km water column (Garcia-Castellanos et al., 2009; Meijer and Krijgsman, 2005) would have resulted in a substantial increase in total vertical stress within and below the Messinian Evaporites the basin. It is not clear at present precisely how this rapid loading by the reflooding of the Mediterranean would have promoted remobilisation on such a scale, although at least locally effective stress must have reduced to zero for remobilisation to have occurred at all (Kopf et al., 2001; Rudolph et al., 2011). What is clear, is that the timing of the first major phase of clastic extrusion in this region coincides with the reflooding event, and it is hard to see this timing as a simple coincidence. The role of basement faults in this evolutionary model is unclear, but it is possible that exploitation of deformed zones in the source region might have led to specific feeders being located above underlying structures (Fig. 8B). Propagation of the feeder zones through the Messinian Evaporites would have promoted the depletion of clastic sediments and overpressured fluids from the source layer, and led to extrusion at the depositional surface (Horizon M), with large bodies built at the seabed, with relief of hundreds of metres (Fig. 8B). The steep flank angles probably indicate that the extruded sediment was relatively viscous, and low in water and gas content (cf. Kopf, 2002) (Fig. 8B). The precise nature of the feeders is unknown because of the poor quality of the seismic imaging on either the time or depth migrated volumes. Feeders for the Pliocene to Recent mud vol-
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canoes in the study area have recently been shown to consist of cylindrical pipe-like conduits (Kirkham et al., 2017a). However, it would be premature to invoke a similar conduit geometry for the much larger and more irregular clastic extrusions. The planform of the clastic extrusions and the geometry of the salt welds beneath them, together with the presence of possible major faults directly beneath them instead hints at a different mode of conduit genesis. The rapid extrusion of >200 km3 of liquefied sediment from a relatively small source region (<1000 km2 ) would have resulted in a major pressure drop and re-equilibration of pressure in the source region and cessation of all extrusive activity. The remnant edifices would then have been passively onlapped by deep water hemipelagites after the reflooding event at 5.33 Ma (Fig. 8C). Later burial and deformation during Late Pliocene to Recent gravitydriven salt tectonics modified the original geometry of the edifices and contributed to their final complex geometry (Fig. 8D). 5.2.3. Implications The observations presented above strongly suggest that these clastic extrusions were formed in a single episode, so from this, is it possible to place any constraints on the likely duration of this extrusive period? The observation that post-emplacement onlap occurs directly on to Horizon L with no interdigitation (e.g. Fig. 4C) implies that these bodies were extruded in a time period of no longer than that represented by the thin package of sediment embodied by this reflection. Using the vertical seismic resolution of 10 m, it is possible to estimate that the maximum thickness of background sedimentation that could have been deposited coevally with the extrusion amounts to no more than 40 m, and is probably considerably less. This yields an upper threshold for the eruptive duration of these clastic extrusions as 200 kyrs based on the local average sedimentation rates for the Pliocene to Recent interval of c. 200 m/Ma. An alternative approach to the question of longevity is to estimate the eruption time for a clastic extrusion using a modern analogue. In the absence of any obviously direct modern extrusive analogue, we tentatively draw an analogy with the sedimenthosted hydrothermal system of Lusi, in east Java, Indonesia. Lusi has been erupting since 2006 with an average flux of 104 m3 /day (3652420 m3 /yr) (Mazzini et al., 2012). Applying this flux to the 116 × 109 m3 volume of LB1, yields an eruptive period of approximately 30 kyrs. In this context, even with the uncertainties in dating, the scale of these end Messinian extrusions is clearly orders of magnitude greater than many other documented clastic extrusions, and demonstrates the potential for long-lived clastic remobilisation and extrusion in single eruptive episodes. The Lusi sediment-hosted hydrothermal system undoubtedly represents the most extreme clastic extrusion related disaster of modern times. Its eruption led to the submersion of several villages by fluidised sediment and displaced >60,000 people (Mazzini et al., 2012; Rudolph et al., 2013). Based on the average flux recorded from Lusi (104 m3 /day) the volume of sediment extruded since its eruption in 2006 can be estimated to be <0.1 km3 . The extruded volume of Lusi is hence 3 orders of magnitude smaller than the largest of the giant clastic extrusions (LB1) described here. Given the potential for disruption to life as seen in the Lusi example, it is important to acknowledge that if a clastic extrusion of the scale of LB1 were to form today in a populated region, it could pose a potentially significant threat to society. The magnitude of the sediment remobilisation and extrusion seen in this relatively small area of the Eastern Mediterranean can be seen in the wider context of the basinal hydrodynamic impact of the MSC and the Zanclean flood. The identification of these giant clastic extrusions fills a gap in the record of the MSC, demonstrating for the first time evidence of a major basinal hydrodynamic event at its terminal stages.
It seems unlikely that this is the only area where the necessary conditions for similar clastic extrusions were achieved. It is therefore possible that other yet to be documented examples of focused fluid flow associated with this terminal stage of the MSC may also exist. More widely, given the major causative influence of rapid loading during salt deposition, and the widely documented role of thick salt sheets in developing overpressure in sedimentary basins, clastic extrusions of a similar or even larger scale may also potentially be present in other salt basins around the world. 6. Conclusion Five multi-km scale anomalous lensoid bodies have been identified within the western slope of the Nile Cone through the interpretation of 3D seismic reflection data. It is argued that the lensoid bodies were formed via a process of clastic remobilisation and extrusion of pre-salt sediments. The remobilised sediment therefore bypassed the thick evaporite sequence. We argue that the scale and timing of these extrusions was a response to the extreme priming and triggering mechanism of rapid burial and loading by evaporites during the MSC followed by catastrophic re-flooding during its terminal stages. These interpretations present the first confirmation of a major basinal hydrodynamic event at the terminal stages of the MSC in the Mediterranean, which until now was merely postulated. We expect that other examples of focused fluid flow features that formed at this time are likely to exist in other parts of the Mediterranean and indeed other salt basins worldwide. Acknowledging the existence and potential scale of clastic extrusions such as these is important when considering the potential threat that future clastic extrusions could pose to society. Acknowledgements We would like to thank Statoil for provision of the data used in this study and Natural Environment Research Council for award number BW22003102 that supported this research. We are also grateful to Schlumberger for provision of the IESX and Petrel software suites for the seismic interpretation. We would like to thank the Editor Professor An Yin and the reviewer Dr Adriano Mazzini for their constructive feedback that truly helped to further develop the manuscript. Appendix A. Supplementary material Supplementary material related to this article can be found online at https://doi.org/10.1016/j.epsl.2017.11.001. References Aal, A.A., El Barkooky, A., Gerrits, M., Meyer, H., Schwander, M., Zaki, H., 2000. Tectonic evolution of the Eastern Mediterranean Basin and its significance for hydrocarbon prospectivity in the ultradeepwater of the Nile Delta. Lead. Edge 19, 1086–1102. Bacon, M., Simm, R., Redshaw, T., 2007. 3-D Seismic Interpretation. Cambridge University Press. Bertoni, C., Cartwright, J., 2005. 3D seismic analysis of circular evaporite dissolution structures, Eastern Mediterranean. J. Geol. Soc. 162, 909–926. Bertoni, C., Cartwright, J.A., 2007. Major erosion at the end of the Messinian Salinity Crisis: evidence from the Levant Basin, Eastern Mediterranean. Basin Res. 19, 1–18. Bertoni, C., Cartwright, J., 2015. Messinian evaporites and fluid flow. Mar. Pet. Geol. 66, 165–176. Bertoni, C., Cartwright, J., Hermanrud, C., 2013. Evidence for large-scale methane venting due to rapid drawdown of sea level during the Messinian Salinity Crisis. Geology 41, 371–374. Blair, T.C., Mcpherson, J.G., 1994. Alluvial fans and their natural distinction from rivers based on morphology, hydraulic processes, sedimentary processes, and facies assemblages. J. Sediment. Res. 64.
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